Steve Wozniak is a legend, rather better known as one of the co-founders of Apple, rather than the less-of-dapple contestant in a recent series of Dancing With The Stars.

He's also widely known as the Ying to Steve Jobs' Yang, a man who dug deep into his own pocket to offer his fellow workers $10 million in shares, while Jobs and the Apple board refused to do so. He's the nice guy.

While never as charismatic as Jobs and who never made the fortune that Jobs amassed. According to many sources, Wozniak is still worth $100 million, who travels widely and attracts a loyal audience wherever he goes.

Steve Wozniak is Apple co-founder and the man working behind Steve Jobs. He works for Apple's astounding technological advances shares his insight on starting a business and what every first-time entrepreneur should know beforehand.

The ‘Woz’ had arrived. The flashing lights and booming duff-duff of a heavy bassline more befitted a DJ at one of Beirut’s infamous clubs than an awkward engineer-at-heart. Steve Wozniak was the headliner at Lebanon’s BDL Accelerate tech conference overshadowing, at least in celebrity, other big names like Microsoft’s Steven Bathiche and iPod creator Tony Fadell.

Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak, or "Woz" as he's commonly known, designed some of Apple's first products back in the 70s and 80s, including the Apple I and the Apple II, which revolutionised the personal computing industry. As a result, he's somewhat of an icon in Silicon Valley.

The Apple co-founder, affectionately known as “Woz”, is as close to tech-head royalty as you can get.

Wozniak designed the Apple I and Apple II computers — the machines that shaped personal computing as we know it — providing the foundations for what is today the most valuable, and arguably the most innovative, company in the world.

If you haven’t heard of Steve Wozniak, it is because he has been overshadowed by his fellow co-founder of Apple, Steve Jobs. This is despite the fact that he was the sole person behind the invention and building of the Apple 1, the first home computer that used a keyboard and normal TV screen as a display.

Following up the massive success of the inaugural Silicon Valley Comic Con in March, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak announced Wednesday that his celebration of all things geek returns to San Jose April 21-23, 2017.